Saturday, June 29, 2024

...and on guitar - The Book (2023) **UPDATE**

Thanks to the recent visitor who pointed out to me that I'd spelled Steve Lukather's name wrong throughout his '...and on guitar' post, and I was surprised that it hadn't been spotted before. The post was easy enough to fix, but then I realised that I should really update the book that I put together from the posts, and that was a bit more tricky. When I opened up my original Word file I found that the cover for the Robbie Blunt post was corrupt, and all the covers after that entry were blank. I though that someone would have mentioned that when I first posted it, so I can only assume that somehow the picture became corrupt after I'd made the post, but it had also affected the pdf, which I don't understand. Anyway, I've managed to re-do the whole thing, and I've double-checked and all the pictures are now there. If you got a dodgy copy when you first downloaded it, or just want the updated version, then try it now. 



pj  



Friday, June 28, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Barry Mann (1975)

Barry Imberman (aka Barry Mann) was born on 9 February 1939, and is best know for his song-writing partnership with his wife Cynthia Weil. His first successful song as a writer was 'She Say (Oom Dooby Doom)', a Top 20 chart-scoring song composed for the band The Diamonds in 1959, which was co-written with Mike Anthony. In 1961, Mann had his greatest success to that point with 'I Love How You Love Me', written with Larry Kolber, and scoring a number 5 hit for the band The Paris Sisters , and the same year Mann himself reached the Top 40 as a performer with a novelty song co-written with Gerry Goffin, 'Who Put The Bomp', which parodied the nonsense words of the then-popular doo-wop genre. Despite his success as a singer, Mann chose to channel his creativity into song-writing, forming a prolific partnership with Cynthia Weil, a lyricist he met while both were staff songwriters at Aldon Music, whose offices were located in Manhattan, near the composing-and-publishing factory the Brill Building. In the late 1960s, Mann and Weil left Aldon Music to head for Hollywood, where they continued to rack up the hits, working with Larry Kolber on Bobby Vinton's version of his earlier hit 'I Love How You Love Me' in 1968, and following up with Jay and the Americans' 'Walking in The Rain' in 1969, and B. J. Thomas's 'I Just Can't Help Believing' in 1970. Meanwhile, in addition to his role behind the scenes, Mann occasionally sought the limelight, and in 1971 he released his own album 'Lay It All Out', featuring himself as a singer, but it did not enjoy the success of his and Weil's works for others. As well as new songs it also included his own versions of some of his biggest hits, 'You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling', 'On Broadway', and 'Something Better'. Unsurprisingly, considering his standing as a songwriter, it wasn't long before all of the songs on the album had received cover versions, even those three afore-mentioned hits. Rather than use the original hit recordings of them, by The Righteous Brothers, The Drifters and Marianne Faithfull, I've chosen contemporary takes of the songs from around the same time as the album, although Bill Medley still gets to sing '...Lovin' Feeling', taken from his 1971 solo album 'A Song For You'. Three extra tracks from the following year round off this collection of songs from Mann's 1971 solo album.    



Track Listing

01 Too Many Mondays (Mary Travers 1973)
02 When You Get Right Down To It (Ronnie Dyson 1971)
03 I Heard You Singing Your Song (The Partridge Family 1973)
04 Holy Rolling (The New Seekers 1972) 
05 You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling (Bill Medley 1971)
06 On Broadway (Eric Carmen 1975)
07 Something Better (Harper's Bizarre 1969)
08 Sweet Ophelia (Wicked Lester 1971) 
09 Don't Give Up On Me (Suzanne 1973)
10 Ain't No Way To Go Home (The Grass Roots 1973)  
11 Rock And Roll Lullaby (B.J. Thomas 1972)
12 So Long Dixie (Blood, Sweat And Tears 1972)
13 The Last Blues Song (Helen Reddy 1972)

The Departure - Inventions (2008)

The Departure was an English rock band from Northampton and were formed in January 2004, after starting as a collaboration between a former Christian commune member David Jones (vocals/guitar) and his friend Sam Harvey. After recruiting old school associates Ben Winton (bass) and Lee Irons (guitar), the line-up was completed with the addition of Andy Hobson (drums) via a musician's ad website. They were signed to Parlophone after playing only three gigs, and being together for just four months, a fact that attracted a considerable level of derision and scepticism. Touring slots with The Killers, Feeder, Duran Duran, Placebo, The Tears and a reformed Gang Of Four soon followed, as the band sought to build a support base ahead of their first slew of releases. Debut single 'All Mapped Out' was released on 2 August 2004, debuting at number 30 on the UK singles chart, and it was included on the soundtrack to the 2006 video game 'Driver: Parallel Lines', while follow-up single 'Be My Enemy' emerged on 18 October 2004, and was included on the soundtrack to 'FIFA 06'. They released their debut album 'Dirty Words', later that year, and it was trailed the week before its release by the reissue of the 'All Mapped Out' single, but disappointingly it charted lower than the original. The album drew a middling response from critics, who varied between praising it for its bleak, futuristic atmosphere, and slating it for its perceived superficiality and over-reliance on the music of the 1980's for inspiration. By early 2006, Irons had left the band citing artistic differences, and Hobson followed later that year, being replaced by the original drummer, Simon Alexander. The four-piece began work on the follow-up to 'Dirty Words' in Grouse Lodge Studios, Ireland, and it was given an expected release date of 2007. However, 2007 came and went, and in January 2008 the band announced that they had split up after being dropped by Parlophone. In 2010 Jones formed a new band called NewIslands, who released the single 'Out Of Time', while later in the decade he formed a duo called Born Stranger, but The Departure's second studio album has yet to see the light of day, and so for any fans who fondly remember 'Dirty Words', here is their 'Inventions' album, which should have appeared in 2008. 



Track listing

01 We Will Be The Only Ones
02 7 Years
03 Love Forever
04 Young And Clever
05 Pieces
06 Chemicals
07 Not Alone
08 Lights Go Out
09 Falling
10 Whose Side Are You On

Bo Hansson - Sagan Om Ringen (Lord Of The Rings) (1970)

Bo Hansson is a Swedish musician, most known for his 1972 concept album. 'Music Inspired By Lord Of The Rings, but before that album he had worked as one half of the duo Hansson & Karlsson. The duo were relatively well known in their native Sweden and between 1967 and 1969 they released a series of well received albums, all of which are worth checking out , but by early 1969 Janne Karlsson had embarked upon a successful career as a television presenter and comedian, resulting in the breakup of the duo. At around the same time, Hansson became fascinated with the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, and in particular 'The Lord Of The Rings', after being introduced to the book by a girlfriend. Hansson moved into a friend's apartment and began working on a musical interpretation of the book, and then approached sound engineer and founder of Silence Records, Anders Lind, with the idea of recording an album based on the book. Lind was encouraged by Hansson's demos and agreed to release the album on Silence. However, the fledgling record company could not afford the expensive recording studio time needed to realise the production of the album, and so a small summer house on the remote island of Älgö was converted into a makeshift recording studio, and throughout late 1969, Hansson and Lind worked on the album with the help of a handful of session musicians and friends. They then relocated to Studio Decibel in Stockholm to complete the album in early 1970, with Hansson's original ideas of including a string section and other exotic instruments having to be replaced by primitive electronic keyboards and Moog synthesizers due to lack of finances. 
The album was released in Sweden by Silence Records in December 1970 under the title 'Sagan Om Tingen', and it enjoyed modest commercial success in its native country, leading Hansson to compose additional material based on Tolkien's book. News of the album's success and popularity in Sweden travelled to England and as a result, it was licensed to Tony Stratton Smith's Charisma Records in 1972, although Hansson and Charisma were forced to give the album the augmented title of 'Music Inspired By Lord Of The Rings', at the insistence of Tolkien and his publishers Allen & Unwin. Tolkien's publishers also had a hand in determining the musical content of the album, insisting that it remain completely instrumental, and so the retitled album was released in September 1972, housed in a new cover, and including two extra tracks. It was a huge success in the UK, with the strange other-worldly music and Tolkienesque subject matter proving popular during the early 1970's, a time when interest in Tolkien's writings among college students was at an all-time high. The album peaked at number 34 on the UK Album Chart in November 1972, and is still considered a classic of the progressive rock genre. My only criticism of it is that it was quite a short album, at just over 35 minutes, and so when it was re-issued an extra track was added, which consisted of early demos of the first three tracks, titled 'Early Sketches From Middle Earth'. These were significantly different from the finished versions, and so I thought it would be interesting to use a couple of these slower-paced, alternate takes, (I felt that 'The Old Forest' needed to be the faster version), and also try to extend the three shorter tracks, which resulted in an album just shy of 40 minutes. As I imagine that most people who own this already would probably have the 1972 UK re-issue, I've used the original 1970 album cover, with Hansson's name added for this post, and although it's not massively different from the original, there are enough changes to make it worth at least one listen.  



Track listing

01 Leaving Shire (Första vandringen) 
02 The Old Forest (Tom Bombadil) (Den gamla skogen/Tom Bombadil) 
03 Fog On The Barrow-Downs (I Skuggornas rike)
04 The Black Riders (Flight To The Ford) (De svarta ryttarna/Flykten till vadstället)
05 At the House Of Elrond (The Ring Goes South) (I Elronds hus/Ringen vandrar söderut)
06 A Journey In The Dark (En vandring i mörker)
07 Lothlórien
08 Shadowfax (Skuggfaxe)
09 The Horns Of Rohan (Battle Of The Pelennor Fields) 
(Rohans horn/Slaget på Pelennors slätter)
10 Dreams In The House Of Healing (Drömmar i Läkandets hus)
11 Homeward Bound (The Scouring Of The Shire) (Hemfärden/Fylke rensas)
12 The Grey Havens (De grå hamnarna)

Ciara - Go Girl (2009)

Ciara Princess Harris was born in Fort Hood, Texas, on 25 October 1985, and attended North Clayton High School before graduating from Riverdale. In her mid-teens she formed the all-girl group Hearsay with two of her friends and recorded some demos, but as time went on they began to have differences and eventually parted ways. She later signed a publishing deal as a songwriter, and her first writing credit was on Blu Cantrell's debut album, 'So Blu', for the song '10,000 Times'. It was when she was writing songs that she met music producer Jazze Pha, whom she called her "music soulmate", and they worked together on writing for her debut album. In early 2004 she recorded a demo with record producer Sean Garrett, which came to the attention of Lil Jon and became her debut single 'Goodies', followed by her debut album of the same name in September 2004. The album debuted at number three on the U.S. Billboard 200, staying there for 71 weeks, and was certified triple platinum by the RIAA in 2006. '1, 2 Step' featuring Missy Elliott was released as the album's second single, reaching the top 10 in many countries, and topping the charts in Canada, and this was followed by 'Oh' featuring Ludacris, as the third single in March 2005. She was an opening act for Gwen Stefani's Harajuku Lovers Tour 2005 and went on tour with Chris Brown and Bow Wow on the Holiday Jam Tour in December 2005, and at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards she received four nominations, including Best New Artist, Best Rap/Sung Collaboration for '1, 2 Step', and Best Rap Song for Missy Elliott's single 'Lose Control'. 
In December 2006 Ciara released her second studio album, 'Ciara: The Evolution', becoming her first and only number one album on the U.S. Billboard 200, going on to be certified platinum. Four top ten singles were released from the album, with 'Get Up' also being used in the 2006 film 'Step Up'. In addition to her music, Ciara made her acting debut in the MTV Films production 'All You've Got' in May 2006, playing Becca Whiley, a teenager who is competing in a volleyball tournament. In October 2008 she was honoured as Billboard's "Woman of the Year", because of her success as a recording artist and leadership in embracing the changing the music business. Her third album was originally scheduled for a September 2008 release, but 'Fantasy Ride' was eventually released after several delays in May 2009, combining her R&B and hip hop sound from her previous albums along with a new pop and dance sound. 'Go Girl' was the lead single released from the album, but after it achieved minimal success it was later deemed a promo single, and  'Never Ever' became the official lead single, while 'Love Sex Magic', featuring Justin Timberlake, became a worldwide hit, peaking within the top 10 in 20 countries. During the 'Fantasy Ride' sessions, over thirty songs were considered for the album, as when the concept was originally conceived in 2008 it was considered for a three-disc collection idea, to be led by the T-Pain-produced gem 'Go Girl' as the lead single, but her label decided against the 3-CD idea, as well as further complicating matters by shelving a teaser mixtape/sampler that was intended to hype up anticipation for the album. In the end thirteen tracks were chosen for the final running order of 'Fantasy Ride', but that involved ditching over twenty songs, including the title track and the proposed 'Go Girl' single. Rather than leave them in the vaults, here is a companion album to the original 'Fantasy Ride', and as that title is now taken I've renamed it after that proposed lead single.   



Track listing

01 Fantasy Ride (feat. Claude Kelly) 
02 Click, Flash
03 Blauw (feat. Rodney 'Darkchild' Jerkins)
04 Up & Down 
05 Switch
06 Fit Of Love
07 Tick-Tock (Mr. Mechanic)
08 Go Girl (feat. T-Pain)
09 Cool On You 
10 Secret 
11 Swim 
12 Echo
13 One More Dance 

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (Early Version) (1974)

Time for another guest post from Mike Solof, and this time it's an alternative look at one of both his and my favourite albums of all time.
I've always loved Genesis and all their various group versions (except for the last album without Collins… who the heck is Ray Wilson??) But 'Lamb...' always held a special place in my heart. I recently got a hold of Highland's great compilation of all the different outtakes available from the album, and although it was a cool listen it was repetitive at times, and still missing some cuts. So I decided to go through all the different versions included in their set and try to edit together a complete alternate version made of the best cuts and segments of cuts from all the demo's available. To do this I had to mix together early takes, demo’s, alternate mixes, and the occasional live track here and there to fill in the missing gaps, as I figured the live tracks were the closest I could come to including an "alternate version".  I really liked the way this turned out and made three different versions. The first was just a pretty seamless entire album version. The second was a 5 part segmented version where each "suite" was separated at the parts that didn’t really mix well into the next, usually because the early takes sound very different from the alternate demo mixes of the finished takes. As much as possible I tried to use the early takes over everything else because they are so unique and different. The third and final version I made up was each track presented as an individual track. This was my least favourite version as some tracks had rough beginnings and ending and worked much better when gently mixed into the next track using fade ins and fade outs. Once I had the whole thing edited to my liking… I turned to my friend CaptainAcid for help with remastering this to sound as best it could. It is my first team-up on remastering and I really appreciate all his help. He helped me touch up about 80% of the whole album and those bits and pieces sound magnificent! THANKS CAPTAIN!! Then, after much discussion with pj we decided to go with posting the full, unedited, one track, complete version for... THE FLOW! (It’s all about The Flow baby!). On most cuts the vocals were very low in the mix so I used modern tech to raise them so you can now here all of Peter's imperceptible, incoherent and unintelligible mumblings in gorgeous clarity, lol, you can thank me later!!) If anyone would like the other versions just drop a note in the comment section and I will gladly provide them, Attention Hound that I am!) 
PS If you'd like to hear and see another fun version of this album, check out this YouTube video by another favourite artist of mine Kevin Gilbert! Kevin was a huge Genesis fan and was actually being considered to take over for Collins. It's really rather a tragic story, as when Kevin’s manager found out that Kevin was on the short list as Collin’s replacement he rushed over to Kevin’s house to tell him, only to find Kevin had accidentally killed himself at his home. But here is a link to Kevin (and Giraffe, his incredible back-up band!) performing 'The Lamb; almost in it's entirety, and it’s just FREAKING BRILLIANT! Ahhh…what might have been, but that's a story I'll save for a possible Kevin Gilbert post I'm considering doing here! (Let me know if you’d like that in the comments!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-RtfxuX3Co.
It's always my pleasure to present the various incarnations of Genesis in new and different ways, like this one posted on Paul's site recently   https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2021/05/genesis-acoustic-evening-with-genesis.html
So here is the track listing of what I ended up using from the 2 LP Highland set.



Track listing

01 The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (take 1)
02 Fly On A Windshield (take 1)
03 Broadway Melody Of 1974 (live)
04 Cuckoo Cocoon (different mix demo 1)
05 In The Cage (take 3 and demo mix)
06 The Grand Parade Of Lifeless Packaging (different mix demo 3)
07 Back In N.Y.C. (take 1 and demo mix 3) 
08 Hairless Heart (unnumbered early take)
09 Counting Out Time (take 1)
10 The Carpet Crawlers (live)
11 The Chamber Of 32 Doors (take 1)
12 Lilywhite Lilith
13 Drum Solo - Waiting Room (different mix demo)
14 Anyway (different mix demo)
15 Here Comes The Supernatural Anesthetist (take 1 -demo with Phil on vocals)
16 The Lamia (take 2)
17 Silent Sorrow In Empty Boats (live)
18 The Colony Of Slipperman (Arrival / A Visit To The Doktor / Raven) (take 5)
19 Ravine (live)
20 The Light Dies Down On Broadway (unnumbered early take)
21 Unused Instrumental Intro - Riding The Scree (different mix demo)
22 In The Rapids / It (take 2)

I hope you enjoy this rare peek behind the curtain at Genesis recording their most brilliant album in their catalogue.

Michael

PPS… as always, there is a lot more background info around - here are three great articles on the making of this stunning prog rock masterpiece!

For my part I just made the cover, which I wanted to keep as close to the iconic original as possible, so I decided just to colourize the original artwork. pj

Jessica Andrews - Ain't That Life (2005)

Jessica Danielle Andrews Chagnon was born on 29 December 1983 in Huntingdon, Tennessee, and discovered her passion for singing in the fourth grade. She planned on dancing in her school's talent show, but her sister convinced her to sing Dolly Parton's 'I Will Always Love You' instead, and a tape found its way to producer Byron Gallimore, who signed her to DreamWorks Records Nashville. At the age of 15, she released her debut album, 'Heart Shaped World', using 12 of the 50-plus songs that Gallimore had her record, and its debut single was 'I Will Be There For You', reaching No. 28 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in 1999. In April 2000 she made her debut on the Grand Ole Opry, and by the end of the year she'd had two more Top 40 country singles in 'You Go First (Do You Wanna Kiss)' and 'Unbreakable Heart', although the fourth single, 'I Do Now', didn't fare as well. The album itself peaked at No. 24 on the Top Country Albums charts, and at the 2000 Academy of Country Music awards she won the award for Top New Female Vocalist. Her second album 'Who Am I' came out in 2001, and was described by a then 17-year old Andrews as a more mature effort than 'Heart Shaped World', because it focused more on the emotions that come with growing up. The lead single was the title track, and it became her only Number One (and only Top Ten) hit on the country music charts. The success of 'Who I Am' also earned her a nomination for the Horizon award at the 2001 Country Music Association awards, while the album itself received RIAA gold certification for sales of 500,000 copies only four weeks after its release. Her third studio album was released in 2003, and 'Now' featured more of an emphasis on ballads than her first two records. In late 2004 Andrews charted with a duet with Bret Michaels of the rock band Poison, entitled 'All I Ever Needed', for his solo album 'Freedom Of Sound', with the song being Michaels' only country hit. Shortly afterwards Andrews began work on her fourth studio album, tentatively titled 'Ain't That Life', and two taster singles were released, although 'The Marrying Kind' failed to chart, while 'Summer Girl' peaked at No. 46 in mid-2005. The album was all set to go when DreamWorks' recording division was dissolved, and all the albums in their pipeline were cancelled. In October 2008 she signed with Lyric Street Records' subsidiary imprint, Carolwood Records, and released the single 'Everything', which went to No. 45 in early 2009, but once again her album was pushed back and then cancelled when Carolwood Records closed, and she was the only artist not to be transferred to its parent label, Lyric Street. In November 2010 Geffen Records released a greatest hits album titled 'Icon', but that's the last that we've heard from Jessica Andrews, and so as it's bad enough having one album cancelled, let alone two, here is what would have been her fourth studio album 'Ain't That Life'.



Track listing

01 Ain't That Life
02 Ain't That Something
03 Bad Girl Blues
04 Didn't You Know How Much I Loved You
05 Forever To Go
06 I Need A Man
07 I'm Going Back
08 The Marrying Kind
09 Me
10 Poison's In The Sugar
11 Sing This City Home
12 Straight To The Bone
13 Summer Girl
14 Walking Out The Door
15 When We Get There
16 That's Who I Was

The Neptunes - My Drive Thru (2011)

In 2005 Star Trak signed rapper Slim Thug and released his debut album, 'Already Platinum', with singles from it giving Star Trak Entertainment yet more hits with 'Like A Boss' and 'I Ain't Heard Of That'. After the release of Slim Thug's album, Geffen Records was partially absorbed into Interscope, which moved Star Trak into an exclusive distribution deal with Interscope, which ended all business with Geffen, although they did still manage to add Kenna and Robin Thicke to their roster. In 2006 Pharrell Williams released his debut solo album, 'In My Mind', which provided another two hits for the label, 'Can I Have It Like That' with Gwen Stefani, and 'Number One' with Kanye West, and it capitalized on what had become 'the Neptunes sound'. Other releases in 2006 were Robin Thicke's second album, 'The Evolution Of Robin Thicke', and Clipse's second album, 'Hell Hath No Fury', featuring the hit single 'Mr. Me Too'.  This was their first release through their Re-Up Gang Records imprint, but because of constant delays on the album's release date, then low record sales, Clipse asked for a release from the Jive Records label, which in turn released them from Star Trak Entertainment, moving their Re-Up Gang Records imprint to Columbia Records. Further signings to Star Trak included Teyana Taylor, Chester French, Natasha Ramos, Epoch When and Sergio Veneno, and in 2007, Kenna released his album, 'Make Sure They See My Face', on Interscope, with production from the Neptunes. In this final compilation of rare and unreleased productions from the duo, we have a dozen tracks from 2007 to 2011, following the signing of that group of artists, some of whom then recorded music which was never destined for commercial release. I was quite pleased with the cover when I found that there really was a drive thru called Neptune Submarine Sandwiches. 



Track listing

01 Heart Beat (Pharrell Williams feat. Nicole Scherzinger)
02 My Drive Thru (N.E.R.D. feat. Julian Casablancas & Santigold)
03 Gone Away (Joe & Pharrell Williams)
04 Get Down (Rick Ross feat. Pharrell Williams)
05 Let Loose (N.E.R.D.)
06 Not My Fault (Chris Brown)
07 Devastation (Omarion)
08 BabyGirl (R. Kelly) 
09 My Ex Girlfriend (Bobby Valentino feat. Pharrell)
10 Soldier (N.E.R.D. feat. Santigold, Fam-Lay & Lil' Wayne)
11 Bridges (Cee Lo Green) 
12 Lazer-Gun Carryin' (N.E.R.D.)

Friday, June 21, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Burt Bacharach (1971)

In 1956 Burt Bacharach and lyricist Hal David were both working in the Brill Building in New York City for Famous Music, which is where they published their first songs as co-writers. The songs published in 1956 included 'I Cry More' (featured in the motion picture 'Don't Knock The Rock'), 'The Morning Mail', and 'Peggy's In The Pantry', but their career breakthrough came when their song 'The Story Of My Life' was recorded by Marty Robbins, becoming a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Country Chart in 1957. Soon afterward, 'Magic Moments' was recorded by Perry Como for RCA Records, and reached No. 4 on the Most Played by Disc Jockeys chart, and these two songs were the beginning of a career in which they composed over 230 songs together for the pop market, motion pictures, television, and Broadway. In 1961 Bacharach discovered singer Dionne Warwick, who was working as a session backup singer at the time, and that year the two, along with Dionne's sister Dee Dee Warwick, released the single 'Move It On The Backbeat' under the name Burt and the Backbeats - the first time a record appeared under his name. Bacharach and David were both excited by Warwick's singing and decided to form a production company, Blue JAC Productions, so they could write for her and produce her recordings, and she signed with the new company, and the team subsequently secured a recording contract with Scepter Records for Warwick's recordings. Warwick made her solo recording debut in 1962 with 'Don't Make Me Over', which also became her first hit, and their partnership with Warwick became one of the most successful teams in popular music history. Bacharach released his first solo album in 1965 on the Kapp Records label, but 'Hit Maker!: Burt Bacharach Plays the Burt Bacharach Hits' was largely ignored in the U.S., although it rose to No. 3 on the UK album charts, where his version of 'Trains And Boats And Planes' had become a top five single. In 1967, he signed with A&M Records both as an artist and a producer, recording several solo albums, consisting of a mix of new material plus rearrangements of his best-known songs. In 1969 Bacharach released his second A&M album, 'Make It Easy On Yourself', which like its predecessor, featured outstanding song-writing. One of the highlights of the record was the great production between Bacharach and Phil Ramone, as well as the instrumental performances, and even songs that weren't immediately pleasing to the ear grew on the listener. 'I'll Never Fall In Love Again', 'Do You Know The Way To San Jose?' and the title track were all reclaimed and reworked for the record, and by the end of the year of it's release nearly all of the rest of the tracks had been picked up and recorded by other artists for their own records. So here are their takes on the songs from Bacharach's 'Make It Easy On Yourself' album, together with a few tracks from his 1971 eponymous release to make up the running time, and I've gone for less well-known versions of the biggest hits to give it a bit of variety.     



Track listing

01 Promises, Promises (Connie Francis 1968)  
02 I'll Never Fall In Love Again (Bobbie Gentry 1969)  
03 Knowing When To Leave (Kathy Kirby 1969)  
04 Any Day Now (Elvis Presley 1969)
05 Wanting Things (Dionne Warwick 1968)
06 Whoever You Are I Love You (Johnny Mathis 1969)
07 Make It Easy On Yourself (Long John Baldry 1966)
08 Do You Know The Way To San Jose (Rita Reys 1971)
09 Pacific Coast Highway (Jim Wilkas 2023)
10 This Guy's In Love With You (Georgie Fame 1969)
11 All Kinds Of People (The 5th Dimension 1971)
12 One Less Bell To Answer (Gladys Knight And The Pips 1971)

Allie X - CollXtion VI (2016)

The fourth collection of superb unreleased tracks from Allie X also comes from 2016, and they form the final volume in my addition to her CollXtion series.  



Track listing

01 Make Me Go (Da Da Da)
02 Savior
03 All I Want Is To Be With You
04 High Horse
05 Offering
06 Purge
07 Blindspot
08 Let It Die
09 Portal
10 Ugly
11 Happy Tears
12 Lifeline
13 Petals
14 Work Us Out
15 A Night Like This
16 For Real
17 Permanent Marker
18 Better
19 I Don't Wanna Fall In Love

Billy Joel - All My Life (2014) **UPDATE**

It was mentioned in a comment from Michael P. that there was another track that I could have included here, which was the extended single version of 'Sometimes A Fantasy' from 1980, which not only included a 'Helter Skelter' reference for those in the know, but also has different panning on the guitars, so I've decided to update the post. 
For a man who has only released twelve studio albums spanning 1971-1993, Billy Joel has a large number of rare and alternate tracks out there, from edited promo singles to extended 12"s, duets to rare cover versions. This set gathers together fourteen of the best of them, starting with the edited promo 7" of his 'Piano Man' single from 1973, which might sound odd to fans of the longer version, but the label obviously didn't feel that radio stations wouldn't play a four and a half minute song back then. We then jump forward to 1982 for a rare non-album b-side, followed by extended versions of a couple of his singles, and an alternate take of a collaboration with Steve Winwood. 1993 sees another rare b-side and the original extended version of the title track from his 'River Of Dreams' album, and from the mid 2000's he was duetting with a number of other artists, such as Tony Bennett, Barbara Streisand, Jimmy Webb, Rosie O'Donnell, and Johnny Mathis. In 2007 he released the 'All My Life' single only in Australia, and we end with a couple of covers of Paul McCartney songs, recorded for the 'Art Of McCartney' tribute album in 2014. Hopefully even the most ardent Joel fan should find something of interest here that they might not have heard before. 



Track listing

01 Piano Man (edited promo single 1973) 
02 Sometimes A Fantasy (single edit 1980)
03 Elvis Presley Blvd. (b-side of 'Allentown' 1982)
04 Tell Her About It (extended version 1983) 
05 Keeping The Faith (special extended mix 1983) 
06 Getting Closer (alternate version with Steve Winwood 1986)
07 You Picked A Real Bad Time (b-side of 'All About Soul' 1993) 
08 The River Of Dreams (original extended version 1993) 
09 The Good Life (duet with Tony Bennett 2006)
10 All My Life (single 2007)
11 Wichita Lineman (duet with Jimmy Webb 2010)
12 New York State Of Mind (duet with Barbara Streisand 2014)
13 Maybe I'm Amazed (from 'The Art Of McCartney' tribute album 2014) 
14 Live And Let Die (from 'The Art Of McCartney' tribute album 2014)

Vinnie Vincent - Guitars From Hell (1991)

Vincent John Cusano, better known by his stage name Vinnie Vincent, was born on 6 August 1952, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and he picked up the guitar at an early age, being inspired by bluegrass and rock and roll. In 1980 he moved to Los Angeles, California where he became a staff songwriter for the television series 'Happy Days' and 'Joanie Loves Chachi', with many of the series songs being written on his acoustic guitar while sitting at the Cunninghams' kitchen table on the 'Happy Days' set. After being introduced to the band KISS by songwriter Adam Mitchell, Vincent was brought in as the replacement for guitarist Ace Frehley when he left the group, as his personality meshed well with Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, thus enabling him to play lead guitar on six of the nine tracks on the 'Creatures Of The Night' album, as well as co-writing three. After a commercially disappointing Tenth Anniversary tour, that finished on a high at what ended up being the last "makeup" show in Brasil, Vincent returned to the studio with KISS to record the 'Lick It Up' album. His work was productive, yielding eight co-writes out of the ten songs on the album, but although he performed well live with KISS, he refused to sign an employment contract, which strained the relationship with Simmons/Stanley. This arose because of disputes over his role in the band and pay, and so consequently Vincent never formally became a member of the band. This ultimately led to him leaving after the North American leg of the 'Lick It Up' tour, where he was replaced by Mark St. John. Despite parting on bad terms, Vincent was later used by KISS as a songwriter on the 1992 album 'Revenge', but he soon fell out of favour with Simmons and Stanley, as they claimed that he again began pulling the same kind of crazy stuff that led to him leaving the band in the first place. After he left KISS, Vincent formed the Vinnie Vincent Invasion, and released a self-titled solo album in 1986 with Robert Fleischman on vocals, then followed it up in 1988 with 'All Systems Go', featuring Mark Slaughter on vocals and Dana Strum on bass. Demos for a third album were recorded, but this was never released due to the Enigma record label going bankrupt, but the eleven tracks saw Robert Fleischman return to the band in place of Mark Slaughter, who had gone on to form his own band Slaughter, taking bassist Dana Strum with him, and they were joined by Chris Lee on bass and Andre Labelle on drums. The album was originally to be titled 'Revenge', but Gene Simmons like the title and convinced Vincent to let him have it for the next KISS album, so it was renamed as 'Guitars From Hell', and with nine of the tracks having since surfaced, that's just enough for a storming 43-minute glam-metal shred-fest.  



Track listing

01 Rocks On Fire 
02 Nuke It
03 Shocker 
04 Invincible
05 Truth
06 Full Shredd 
07 Wild Child
08 Youngblood
09 Genesis

Mars Argo - 2012 (2012)

Brittany Alexandria Sheets was born on 20 April 1988 in Saginaw, Michigan, and is an American singer, songwriter and internet personality, best known by her stage name Mars Argo. After meeting Corey Michael Mixter (a.k.a. Titanic Sinclair) on Myspace, they worked together on the YouTube channels digitalfuntown and grocerybagdottv, and later formed the alternative pop band Mars Argo. The band released their debut album, 'Technology Is A Dead Bird', on 6 November 2009, and this was followed by an acoustic EP, 'Internet Sessions', in 2010, and a second EP, 'Linden Place', in 2011. They began working on a second album with Chicago-based producer, Johnny K, soon after 'Technology Is A Dead Bird' was released, but once a number of tracks had been laid down, the duo put their album on hold and moved to Los Angeles in 2012, where they filmed and released the remainder of the YouTube channel's uploads. More songs were later recorded for the album, but the release was pushed back from 2012 to 2013, and then in 2014 the couple separated, although they continued to work together as a band, performing during the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. After a brief hiatus, and revival in December of the same year, they split up permanently in March 2015 without ever finalising their second album. On 17 April 2018 Sheets filed a 44-page lawsuit against Mixter and his new collaborator Poppy (real name Moriah Rose Pereira), alleging copyright infringement, stalking, and emotional and physical abuse being inflicted upon her by the two, in particular accusing Poppy of stealing her look. The lawsuit was dismissed on 14 September, having been settled out of court with agreements that Mixter and Pereira would not be in contact with Sheets, and with Sheets gaining all rights, title and interest to the Mars Argo music and brand. Despite now owning the rights to the music of Mars Argo, the second studio album has never appeared, and so from the many tracks that they laid down between 2009 and 2014, we can pick the ones most likely to have been intended for the record and piece together what could have been the album tentatively titled '2012', and which would have appeared in that very year. 



Track listing

01 Runaway Runaway
02 Using You
03 Be Easy
04 Doctor (Instrumental)
05 Wet Cigarette
06 Open Up The Door In Your Head 
07 Beauty Is Empty 
08 Stuck on You 
09 Wasting Away 
10 Hear Me Out 
11 Me Today
12 Formal Girl
13 Suicide Birds
14 Love In Black And White